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Penny Adrian's avatar

"At a time when men are falling behind their female peers on a number of fronts, fostering healthy, all-male environments may be the first step toward lifting them back up."

Which men are falling behind? WORKING CLASS MEN. Does Richard Reeves know any working class men? If he did, he wouldn't infantilize them the way he does.

Working class men are not suffering from a lack of men's bowling leagues - they are suffering from a lack of BREADWINNER WAGES.

It costs money to go out with the guys. And it costs money to impress a pretty working class girl, who considers staying home to raise her kids a luxury beyond her grasp. But working class men don't have money anymore, because jobs requiring physical ruggedness and strength are no longer valued.

Stop treating working class men like whiny babies and start taking their need to earn a manly wage seriously. That would help to rebuild communities and heal male loneliness and lack of self respect. Blue Collar Lives Matter.

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Richard's avatar

Public sector unions are a trap for the Democratic Party. They are unpopular and in the case of the teachers unions, visibly crazy. But how to decouple from such a big part of the base. You have some Democrats at the local level (school boards) trying to do that but their tenure in office is unstable because the base strikes back. School boards have become a sort of farm team for other government offices when, on the merits, they are rivaled only by sheriffs as the most important local officials.

To fix this several things must be done. First, move school board elections to the general election dates rather than low turnout dates that are dominated by the unions. Appointed boards don't seem to preform any better than elected ones (e.g. Chicago) so that is a non-starter. Second, get some philanthropist with impeccable liberal credentials to drop a couple of billion on a School Board Academy. There is (or was) such a thing for aspiring Superintendents but it was national and the SBA needs to be organized locally and focused on recruiting as well as training board members. If it is privately funded, it can't be defunded by the unions though they will try to infiltrate it. Consideration should be given to paying board members and exempting them from term limits. I tend to think that these latter two ideas would cause more problems than they would fix but people should think about them. Term limits can be dealt with by a robust recruiting process that creates a succession chain. Unpaid boards can be ameliorated by the discipline to stay focused on major policies and adequately supervise the staff.

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